?fcraiaan&3?eto$ News BehmdThe News
, FRANK JENKINS MALCOLM TPLKY
Cditor Managing; Editor
A consolidation of (he Evening Herald and the Klamath
New. Published every afternoon except Sunday at Espla
nade and Pine itreeU. Klamath Falls, Oregon, by the Herald
Publishing Co. and the Nm Publlihlng Company. .
littered ai aeoond elate matter at the post office of Klamath
. rail. Ore., on August 20, IBM, under act of congress,.,
March 6, IV79
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''fiiseeaitte)Wej
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
LOCAL aviation men do not look for final
action on the airline proposals for Klam
ath Falls until April. That seems like a long
time, but, as one man said,
who expects speed from a gov
ernment agency?
The agency in question is
the civil aeronautics board,
which has before it the recom
mendations of an examiner
on the airline projects, and
the testimony offered by cer
tain airlines and by Klamath
people in support of mainline
service to this neglected community.
Word here is that the CAB EPLEY
is considering the knotty question of export
airlines first, and the domestic cases, including
' those affecting Klamath, have been shelved
for later consideration.
It took about six months after the examiner
made his report before the board conducted a
.' hearing on the west coast cases, and it is ex
pected a decision may not be made for six
' months after the hearing. The hearing was
held in October, and that is the basis of the
;, suggestion that a decision may come in April.
i It might come sooner, and it might be later.
Meanwhile, . Klamath Falls, denied needed
'-. airline service for years because of decisions
by the CAB, goes right on without the service.
Airmail to and from this city still sometimes
: moves slower than straight mail. People want
' ing to use airlines for -travel have to go by
car, train or bus to distant points to get to the
planes. . - -
'Aviation people here are still optimistic about
the forthcoming decision- of the CAB. But
' they aren't, optimistic'; about CAB speed. It
may. be the air age, but the civil aeronautics
board moves at snail's pace. " .
School Board Changes
WHEN Howard Barnhisel, a member of the
city elementary school board, left-, for
. the service, C. S. Elliot was appointed to take
.' his place.- Subsequently, while Mr. Barnhisel ,
- was' still' away, Mr. Elliot was elected to the .
post - --'-
Mr." Barnhisel'.'has "returned from overseas,
and Mr. Elliot this week voluntarily " stepped
- out of the school board job so that Mr. Barn- -
nisei could resume his duties there. .He.de-..
- 'serves commendation, for this unselfish action.
; . Another resignation . came ' this week 'from
' A. R. tDlckson, who had been appointed to
serve the; unexpired term of Pearl Schultz, ;,:
resigned, and also had been elected in his own
right. This position is on the high school
board. .
Both Mr. Elliot and Mr. Dickson have
1 rendered excellent- service to the school dis- -.
tricts in a period of many difficult problems.
", They have the sincere appreciation of all who
know of that service.
: Housing Note
.' A LOCAL man who recently purchased a
A piece of property reported this exper
ience:. When he went to his newly acquired house,
' he was met at the door by the wife of the
i man who had been renting the place from the
; previous owner.
"You get right out of here!" she ordered in
. shrill tones that meant business.
He retreated a pace or two and sought to
; explain that he had bought , the house and pro
posed to take possession.
,; The lady replied in even more emphatic
': tones, and further informed him that her hus
band would take care of him that night.
:.; In the evening,' the husband came to see, him.
ij To his surprise, the husband opened up in a
conciliatory voice. :
"Don't get too "excited about what happened
;; today," he said. "We'll get out of the house as
I'soon as we can arrange it. My wife scares
xne, too!"
i For the sake of a couple of frightened males,
I we offer no identification in this story. If it
J; resembles any incident which may be mentioned
i ll i lamuy discussion at the dinner table
. tonight, it is purely coincidental.
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Jan. 16 The way State
Secretary Byrnes has been siding with
Moscow has impelled assembling congressmen
to ask if a Big Two is supplanting the Big
Three or Five, if tills is new American policy
and whether Byrnes has the backing of Presi
dent Truman in these matters.
Prying insiders have been able to dig out
much:
When Mr. Byrnes stepped from his. Moscow
plane with agreements practically validnting
the Russian position in Europe, he said he
would go home for a few days, take a bath
and sit and enjoy the remaining Yuletide. . lie
did not even get the bnth. He was summoned
immediately to the presidential cruising yacht
Returning to Washington thereafter, he said
he would spend the New Year Day opening
his Christmas presents and cards, but he was
called back to the yacht.
These circumstances caused the White House
crowd to surmise Mr. Truman was displeased,
if not angry. But the explaining which Mr.'
Byrnes then started publicly attempting, was
concerned only with assurances that the atomic
bomb would not be given away before we found
the answer. Nothing was mentioned about giv-.
ing away Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia or
other nations.
Mr. Truman, subsequently, went beyond the
usual manner of his responses in a press con
ference, to endorse what Byrnes had done.
The president said there was no reason for
"dissatisfaction" with the accomplishments at
Moscow and the agreements were a "con
structive" step forward.
The change of front of American foreign
policy was thus established by these events,
and what is now developing in London is
merely the result.
Shocked Surprise
Ik IEWS readers may have tossed their heads
from the paper in shocked surprise when
Mr. Byrnes voted with the Russians, against
the British, in the initial world organization
step of electing a president of the UNO as
sembly.
Actually this was part of a deal which the
Russians thought went even further. They had
asked Byrnes if he would approve their choice
of the Norwegian leader, and he said he would
They .thought he would publicly second their
man, a misunderstanding privately attributed
here to the difference in languages.
When the state secretary merely voted, with
out a seconding speech, the Russian UNO dele
gation started their movement to change the
rules so as to require public nominations and
voting.
.In this situation, Mr. Truman is concerning
- himself "90 per cent with domestic affairs,
his closest observers concede. Certainly he is
relying on Byrnes to establish foreign policy
to a greater extent than any president since
Harding relied on a state secretary (it was
Charles Evens Hughes then),
- Intimate, or calling associates of the presi
dent, do not include any known names of a
person who might be regarded as a heavy
" weight counselor in the foreign field. And,
in recognition of the new power of the state
.-secretary in world affairs, the Byrnes author
ity today is without precedent in otir history.
' " He can give away nations to the influence of
one foreign power or another, without a treaty
requiring -senatorial approval, or without any
real review of his actions by any superior
American authority, except the president, who
,i is forced by his domestic circumstances to be
. only 10 per cent concerned.
For this task, Mr. Byrnes has set up no "new
or secret board of counsel. (His old South
Carolina law partner recently brought into the
department has ' been concerned more with
politics than other affairs). His only top, close
adviser still is Ben Cohen, the silent half of
the old Cohen-Corcoran team which wrote
the early New Deal reform laws.
'
Political Conciliator
- ik IEITHER Byrnes nor Cohen ever had any
I experience before m a world affairs job
or in the subject of international diplomacy
officially. By experience and temperament
Byrnes is a political conciliator, and Cohen,
one of the Frankfurter legal school of thought,
Byrnes once was considered a Baruch man,
when he sought the advice of that elderly and
now retired sage of presidents. In the senate
Byrnes was known as "the great compromiser":
indeed his career was devoted to resolving
the differences of those who fought the wars
of principles.
His life work has not identified him particu
larly with any great cause. He stood to the
last with Mr. Roosevelt for the supreme court
revision bill defeated in congress, and, when
rewarded with a supreme court appointment
himself, he delivered pro-Roosevelt decisions
(including I believe the decision exempting
unions from racketeering laws.)
His closest and most sympathetic observers
attribute his "mistakes" (they do not define
what these are) to his inexperience in the high
technique of diplomacy, but they are not wor
ried. Many congressmen, however, are frankly
beginning to worry whether the tactics of sen
atorial political conciliation will work out so
well in the world field.
SIDE GLANCES
COfH. 1S4S BY WCA MtVKt. MCT.K are, tt. M. PAX. Off.
Market
Quotations
"There have been quite tt few strikes here and there, hut
these have not yet spread to the schools in spite of the
heavy homework I"
II B jli
i From the Klamath Republican
J; January 11. 1906
j. The Republican has been
j named the county official paper.
! A $1000 Chickering grand
piano has been purchased in
Portland fnv iha Lj-i.
school. Local people subscribed
:Kcuciuusiy 10 me piano fund.
Biggest contributions of $15
each came from the KKK store,
TOR GOOD HEALTH!
I Htmwrkolde
Hxtal and Coan
I Alrmenfs
I H.rnla t,Rptun)
j Ooifrfc Ulcer
i, Treated without Hospital
'' Operation
i.MesieVeseItosV7 1QA.M.HSP.M.
J JTmmiV" MtMUj, WtJmnJsf, PrUUj 7 it 10
Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC
S fkyMam and Surgeon
If. E, Corner B. Bumelde and Grand Avenue
Telephone EAat 3918, Portland 14, Oregon
L. F. Willits, B. St. George Bish
op and the Brick store.
From The Klamath Ntwi
January 18, 1936
KUHS hoopsters lost to Med
ford, 24-17, last night.
Clear weather has at last re-
nlaced rain and annur ctnrme in
the Klamath area.
Training School
Reorganization
Urged By Society
PORTLAND .Ton IB IJP
The Oregon Mental Hygiene so
ciety , today asked Governor
Snpll to nnnnlnt a nuaMfinA nar.
son to reorganize the state train
ing school programs. -Director's
of the society said
Acts AT ONCE to,
Relieve and 'Loosen'
alVREfJS
UAD COUGHS'
(CAUSED BV COLDS) ...
totsik must be good Then thou
sands upon thousands, of Doctors
have prescribed it for so-many years.
nsrossiN acts at once riot only to re
dlevs such coughing but also Iboaeiif
phlegm' and makes It easier to raise.
rSafe for both old and young. Pleat-
.PERTUSSINf
their request was based on in
formation learned in recent in
vestigations at the boys' school
at Woodburn.
. The state board of control an
nounced yesterday at Salem the
Usboume f oundation of New
York would be asked to investi
gate the boys training school and
fiillcrest school..
After the Norman conquest
of Britain ther were mora than
70 mints coining gold and silver
in the country, more than now
exist In the world. t
PAIN
of Colds' Muscle Aches
Simple Nauralgia; Ease
Minor Burns Cuts, Bruises
OCT. QUICK ACTIONI
Us this Rub that Disappears '
Get after colds' cough
ing, muscle aches three
waya at once (1) by
helping break local
congestion (2) by eas
ing pain at nerve ends
in the skin (3) by vapors
helping to esse breath
ing and soothe breath
passages. A great help
to have around the
house for these miser
ies, and it's helpful for
many little hurts, for
chafing burn, chapped
lips or skin. Penetro
has a specially pre
pared base of mutton
uet. Rub it on snd it's
gone! Handy. Effective.
25c and 35c. Always get
PENETRO
i rm
LLJ-J
rm
S
Telling
The Editor
Letter printed hart muat not he mars
than 100 words In length, must be srrlb
Un Itgieti on ONI SIDE ol ths aipar
only, and mutt bo limed. Contributions
lollowina these rttfts, jus warmly weh
comod,
REASON FOR CENSORSHIP?
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., (To
the Editor) Dear Sir: I wonder
if the reason the army censored
the service papers on the GI
trouble was for discussing the
unina business tne way it is
being discussed at home. If so.
what good will it do? That
doesn t stop us from wanting to
know who owns the property
that the troops are guarding.
Why are these people so im
portant that our state depart
ment orders U. S. troops to pro
tect their investments? Why call
it fighting for democracy?
-. lien, tisennower says tne
troops are good men, they had
to be to win two wars when the
statesmanship of their nation
was and is at an all-time low.
Secretary of War Patterson
says Hirohito is not a war crimi
nal. Evidently he wants us to
understand he is lust a misunder
stood gentleman; it looks as if he
is slated to Be tne frince urn
berto of the Orient.
The press and radio comment
ing on the GI trouble whine that
the world is watching. Sure it Is.
This: has happened before, the
Russian army in the f nil of 1917,
and the world is still talking
about what they did after they
got home.
sincerely,
W. L. HALLEY,
1526 Etna street.
JESUS WEPT
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore.
(To the Editor) The war is
Over. The shooting has stopped
Dut mere is no peace. People
are iioundering around in a
morass of materialism, fearful
of imaginary goblins, commun
ism, fascism, third world war
and atomic bombs and wailing
i we only nan peace and status
Quo. As for myself I want
nothing of this so called Status
Quo because it contains the
germs that caused the terrible
war that we :ust passed through.
And as for peace, we cannot
have it until we have more
war, relentless war, but i this
time it must be war against
racial discrimination, intoler
ance, selfishness, hate. greed
and injustice.
About ideologies that are
dangerous, a change in our
philosophy would take care of
them. Our materialistic nhilos-
opny is tne compost on which
communism and fascism thrive.
We need not fear the atomic
bomb, as much as we need to
fear the nature of man. Out
lawing the atomic bomb will
not help. We outlawed poison
gas and after that had a worse
war than ever. If we out
lawed all weapons of war, even
down to the pocket knife men
would still fight with eluhn
Such is the effect :of a mater
ialistic philosonhv as we have
today.
A successful democracv must
depend on a spiritual quality of
, Every '',
j! WEDNESDAY ;
'! ' and :'
SATURDAY
i , . . Sat 9 till 1 ;!
;' Wtd8i till 12:15
'i !;
ARMORY
: Baldy's Band ;
Ln per person ':
'0"C ' INC. TAX . J,
citizenship. If it lacks this a ma
tcrialistic dictatorship will tnko
over sooner or later. If wo
would, all of us, place religion
at the center of our lives, its it
was in the center of the lives
of the founders of our nation
and also in the lives of the
framers of our constitution, wo
would be able to make tho
atomic energy a blessing In
stead of a menace and commun
ism and fascism would simply
aisappear.
The other day I met an ac
quaintance, who. at -the time,
was about three sheets in the
wind and he started telling, mo
what an awful shape the world
is in and of course I tried to
tell him my views of things.
He finally said, "Jocns you are
nuts, tne cnurcn is tho bunk,
the preachers arc full of ba
lony, religion is humbug, don't
be a sucker." I happened to re
member reading something
about casting pearls before cer
tain quadrupeds, so did not
argue any farther. But some
how I seemed to get a clearer
understanding of that short
verse which reads. Jesus wept.
A. F. JOENS,
346 Division St.
Native Woman Dies
In Flaming Cabin
CORDOVA, Alaska, Jan. 18
(P) Lena Nachtan, 66-year-old
native woman, died earlv yester
day in -a flaming cabin that
burned when Lloyd Brown
struck a match to light a pres
sure lamp not lealizing gasoline
had been spilled when the lamp
had been filled.
CALL
LEAKY ROOF?
6041
DAY OR NITE
PARAMOUNT
ROOF CO.
Union Roofers
Lattit Equipment
Permanent Maintenance
Joe Snyder Jack Fitigerald
NEW VOHK. Jan. la lAPISama ol
the steam vanlBltod from Ihe roront
artvam-o of Ilio lock ntsrkot In nvor
aet IS-yonr htslts a iilvuult assumed an
Irrouttlar pnllrrtt totfny,
iiusmif quota
American Cult
Am Tl & Tel
Aiinooiuta
Calif Parkin
Commonwonlth Si Sou
Ctlrtli-Wrlslit
Clcnryrat K.Wlrlo
Clrneral Motora
til Not- llv Did
Int Harvester
Kontict-ott
ltlll Urll "A"
MnniBomfry Ward
Nash-Krlv
N Y Central
Northern I'sclflo
I'..- (las Kl
J C l'onnoy
Snfttway Stores
Hears Koelnti'k
Hotttltertt l'scinc
Ntsmlsnl HrnttiU
Sunshine Mtntna
Union Oil Calif
Union I'atilU
11 S Steel
Warner IMcturos H
ln.lt.
iv.i
... , 4HI
.. - 49
.... :i,
m
sll
7IIV
KVt
..... VIM
S4s
:nt.
II)
a
jiM-
tit
441
llllll!
11711
431
... tl.lt;
47
"JJi
Sill;
... iaj
.... IIU
.... J4t,
Potatoes
l01tTI.ANn, J.n lfl-I,ool nurhnkt(
f.mf.w rejniaii iHvcnuiii iwv, no. 1,
3.43 CQItUI. ettH. tfU C nd.
KAN rnANCIHCO Jmn 1A (AP.llftnAi
Potato? ti broken. A untmtktm ran on
ircn; rriVaiij.lirormn i, Nevada a,
Ortu. 3. Idaho t; markal firm to allahl
ly alronisr: Klamath anil Detchutn I Un.
seta No. 1, site A, $:t.M; truck rvvelpti
uguvtrtu, iviainain .i.au, iaa.no fj.tW.
I.OS ANOKI.K8. Jan. 10 (AP-USDA.
roi(i 13 imtkenr IB ununikan car
on track; arrival Uaho a, California
j. iu car arrived by truck; 1 car di
verted; market steady.
. CHICAGO. Jan. It) lAP-U8DA Pola-
lotn; arrtvii no, on (rack 1, loUl U. S.
ah tunic nts H07.
Old storks: supplies moderate, demand
slow, market dull. New stuck.: mipHtra
muuirra.r. acuta. ia aiow. tuarnei uuu.
Idaho Husset Hurbanks, If. K. No. 1,
W 511-3 : Colorado Med MrCtiires, U. 8.
No. L 30; Minnesota and North Da
kota Cubhlers, V S- No, 1, $2.40; com
mercial 3.13; Michigan Itimet nurals,
V. S. No. 1. $3 40-3 30: Wisconsin Chlu-
dowbb, commercial, $3,15-3.23: flouth
Dakota Ullss Triumphs. V, S. No. 1.
40; riorlda 00 lb. sacks at Blls
ttiuiiiimi, vi. a. it u. i, el. (Otl.UU.
LIVESTOCK
DENVER. Jan. 11 (AP-USDA lSalabls
and total sheep 130; most Interval out at
mantel uue to strike; nothlnjf done on
limited supply trucked -In slaughter
lambs, ewe and bucks, (irand cham
pion Individual rat lamb at show sold at
aurtlon for $3 So per lb. Interest now
centering; on auction sale ol load lots
anow aiock.
SOUTJf SAN THANCISCO. Jan. 16
(AP-USDAl Salable cat Ma market
slow: steer scarce: one load heifers of
fared: she stock steady; local drive-In
supply small; three loads good Idaho
cows offered- about two loads common
i urn iu. juano cows iio.oo-iiou wiih
lieht sort: one half car fJHo lb. Idaho cut.
tern $0.00; common-good sausage bulls
quoieo siv.W'iz u; caivei nominal,
food -choice quoted up to $13.00.
Salable hoas none: market nominal
Cood-choic hogs quoted to $19.60; tows
$13.03.
Salable sheep 100: food -choice lambs
nominal, a unfed S14.oa.1S: ervtd ewea
PORTLAND. Ore.. Jan. IS (AP-USDA
slow: beef cattle steady to Incjeoandant
slaughterers; dairy type cows under
pressure, moeuy wean io u cents lower,
occasionally SO rents off on fat kinds:
one lot fairly good 03O-lb. fed St ears
$1(1.30: few 1047 lb. feeder $14.00; good
663 lb. heifers $1330; common -medium
Irades $10 00-13 30; cutter down to
n.OO; ranner and cutter cows largely
$0.00-7.30; shells down to $3.00; fat dairy
type cows up to $u.00; odd head to
$10 00; medium beef cows to $11.60;
medium-good sausage hulls (0.00-1 1 .S3;
few jfoocf veal era $13 00-33: choice quot
able $13.30 or above; medium grades
down to $11.30; culls $7.30.
salable hog 100, total 673; market
Financial peace of mind
can be yours. I
i
AT
SERVICE
YOUR
I
I gait Jf. Jfotaion
I
MFKruENTINO THE
EQUITABLE. LIFE
Kiiuranca Society
New York
lis N. 7th mens SIM
Wednesday, Jen. IS, 1 948
HERALD AND NEWS TOVKf
artlve. steatlyi tiarruws antl H !$
Xft.1 lb. em. Ho; good sows altotll 400 111.
1.190: llaliter wellllls lll. 79-14. t. lew
? III. (toiler iilMn sTn.tMlj Iteavlr-r welsltts
Ojltntalile SI9.9II; bd M III. IHIHO lilMl!
rneillllin amitl 479-090 lb. ! SU SU lo
mostly 111.00 will! 7t) III. ilut-k.
Malnlile and total sheen 90: htililover
S79: full early t-lsarmt!- at steaily prlres:
fine load oiltl lots giMKl-cttnlee fed lainlis
SI4.00 wltlt common Ihrowools at III. no:
ewes scarce; apod grades salable $4.90.
0.00.
WHEAT
CHICAUO. Jatt Id (API May rye
hurdled profit taking ami other liquida
tion today In post another new seasonal
high price, at one time In em-eta of
$I,IM) a bushel. The gains carried Ihe
advance lu more than 13 cents In the
past week.
Exporters were understood to be scout
ing around for large Iota uf cnoti rye
but that thtfv wtire Unavailable) and
Booo-biishel Iota were tielug offered at
prices up to $3 a bushel.
With ntost other grains at or near
celling prices trading lu them was at a
slow pttco,
Wheitt closed unttmnged to kts above
the innvloua fliilah, May $l.ttO'i; cum
unchanged al $l.iu ceilings; oats U tu
c up. May 77'S-Sc: rye uttchaitgetl to
4Sp Iilghnr. May l,0lW-; barley un
changed, May $1,U
Tho word mnusolcum derives
from King MnuoUi to whom h
monumonl wns erected after his
death by his wife, Queen Arte
misia, in 363 1). C.
too Cilenn Mare, Nswi
Hill. Has Millar
Mi.iu Mm Tlial B part. 1st
Ili43 Dan u
10 (HI News MeuntliJi. a ng C.oiOtrl MsM
tltte I, si's Vanee I
Hit wrian Haveriss ana ntwi aisii(
an News
Thursday, January 17 ' S;
Radio Program
KFJI
Mutual-Don Lee
1240 ke.
Wednesday Eve., January 16
m f. m. flabrlel llssttsr,
Bits Walls Time
: Hpelllskl Hsn4s
7:ee Kventns Coneert
7ll& Klamslh Temple
llSO l.ene Hlier
t; Main l ine
sue riesk-Up (see
eiSO a. m, Weaeup Tuaes
7:00 rrsnli llsinlliswsr, News
1 1 IU Mnnilns Meloaiis
1H0 llraillliie News
Ills llesl llurs
SiOO Faverlles ef rsllsrlsy
9:19 rsslilea riashsB
Silts News
il Vli'ler Llntllalir, lltsltk AISs
p oo tvlllUm l.atif. News
11:19 Murlnn lluwney
iSO Memlns Matinee
Vila Carmen Cavallere
IO:tlS tllenn Hardy, News
IU1I9 Hliirniilelle
Itiintt Meiillinlsliiiii Muunlalnetrl
IOi49 Juhn J. Anlliuny
lliuo lllra anil Jeamile
tl:IA Huulh el the tlardsr
llile iueen fer a Usy
Hiss Melodious Meledlss
11:19 Headline News
lti.10 l-uur llsni-e Tunes
11:19 rami rrunl
isen yemllr
ItSO Tares flrurery
1:19 Anterll'an acbeole
atse Masle Thsl ppaikles
1:19 You Firs. 'Km
Ills l.ersl News snd Tews, Teples
H9S Header's Ulfssl
: Haven ef !
S:9e ten Lutheran Cfaurch
S.I9 Else Maawell
4 oo rullen Lewis Jr., News
4ll9 K.i Stiller, News
4:90 rrshlne Jutinsen
4:49 Klamela Theatre Time
ft;ee Variety Revue
A : I A Supermen
9-JS t'epleln Mldulibl
tits Tern Mia
Ml kef
stay arsBei sf
COFFEE
TO RrSelSss ISaafaeSeBWRo!
It's truer! In this "gtot BajaalnbadF oOar, yam i
10t on each pound of coffee purriusKd. Go to yoae
prooer now bjy a Urgw pckiigt of WllEATSHAi
and a pound of your favorita cosToe!
Tbs WHEATENA box-top fa the only coopon 'tm
quired and ifl good for 10 toward the regular pajajf
of any broad of cofleo yoacbooael
What WtZATEKA bl
WHEATENA h the "DJTFTiaZtnr hot tmmuV-'
with the toasted taste of Wheat. It'a a weisxoM
change for brookfaflt : : : taste good, and eTtanda hf
you. Watch your family go lor hi
Enjoy tilts bargain now; Boy a large Wheatena
got any brand of coffee you chooae at a caving of 101
Hurryl OOor good only uitil February 2, vm.
Take it easy... Have a Coca-Cola
. . . the friendly pause adds to gay times
A pause is mighty welcome when you've been burning up a load of
calories on the ice or anywhere! And at that moment when you
pause, you naturally turn to the pause that refreshes with iceold
Coca-Cola. That's the moment when everybody jumps at the friendly
invitation Have a Coe.
OmtD UNDER AUTHOIITY Of THI CQCA-COtA COaPANY t
COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF KLAMATH FALLS
S6S Spring St Phone 8632
Hear Morton Downey KFJI S:I3 As M.
i
, "Coca-Cola" snd tu ibbrtvlatle.
VCoke are the reiisursd (ttde.
J marks which distinguish ths prosV
uet of Tb Coca-Colt Cosnpasy.
Ot4nCCCe.